Hamilton Journal News

Bengals not panicking after New York meltdown

- By Laurel Pfahler Contributi­ng Writer

The Cincinnati Bengals talked all week about not having a letdown against a struggling New York Jets team, but that is exactly what happened.

The Bengals (5-3), who were looking for their third straight road win, fell to the struggling Jets, 34-31, on Sunday. Cincinnati squandered an 11-point lead over the final seven minutes, and even a controvers­ial penalty that allowed the Jets to run down the clock wasn’t a good enough excuse for the meltdown.

Here are five takeaways from the loss:

1. Defense self-imploded Cincinnati took a 31-20 lead with 7:29 left, but self-imploded down the stretch, giving up two touchdowns with a Joe Burrow intercepti­on in between. The offense, when needed most, simply fell flat the rest of the way, while the defense continued to struggle as it had all game.

After the Jets scored to cut the deficit down to five, defensive lineman Shaq Lawson tipped a Burrow pass to himself on the next play from scrimmage, picking it off to put New York at the Cincinnati 14-yard line. Two plays later, Matt White connected with former Bengals tight end Tyler Kroft, and caught a trick-play two-point conversion pass from Jamison Crowder to put the Jets up 34-31 with 3:45 left.

The Bengals managed one first down, but Burrow was sacked on third-and-11, and they placed their hope in the defense making a stop. New York was able to get two first downs and kneel out to preserve the win.

2. Penalty prevented one last chance

The Bengals could have gotten the ball back just after the two-minute warning. However, when Mike Hilton made the stop on thirdand-11, tackling Ty Johnson well short of a first down, the officials called him for unnecessar­y roughness on a helmet-to-helmet in which they said he lowered his head into Johnson.

Trent Green on the CBS broadcast questioned that call because it appeared Johnson had lowered his head and initiated the contact.

A pool reporter interview with referee Craig Wrolstad revealed the officials discussed the penalty briefly but did not bring up the possibilit­y the player on offense had initiated the contact.

“Normally in that situation, there are only a couple of officials looking at it,” Wrolstad said, according to the pool report response. “We’re not all looking at that. I don’t think there was any discussion about the offense. The call was on the defense.”

3. Defense struggled against backup QB

The Bengals defense had trouble figuring out the Jets’ backup quarterbac­k, as White completed 37 of 45 passes for 405 yards and three touchdowns in his first NFL start for injured rookie No. 2 draft pick Zach Wilson. None of his passes traveled more than 15 yards, as White kept things simple to pick apart the Bengals’ zonebased defense.

Jessie Bates and Germaine

Pratt got a pair of easy intercepti­ons off deflection­s on the second and third possession­s, but White rebounded and led the Jets’ comeback with a nearly flawless second half. He completed 14 of 16 passes for 188 yards and two touchdowns. Going into Sunday, the Jets were 0-38 over the past five seasons when trailing by 11 points or more in the fourth quarter.

4. Takeaways not enough The Bengals had a season-best three takeaways but still couldn’t get a win. Bates ran back the first intercepti­on 65 yards to the Jets’ 1-yard line but the Bengals failed to get points out of it. Joe Mixon ran twice to lose yards, Ja’Marr Chase had his second drop of the day and Burrow was sacked on fourth down.

Two plays later, Pratt ended up with an intercepti­on to put the ball back in Burrow’s hands at the 15, and this time Mixon did get the touchdown from the 1.

With a 14-7 second-quarter lead, Vonn Bell stripped the ball from Crowder at the end of a 26-yard reception, but the Bengals settled for a field goal.

Burrow finished with 259 yards passing and three TDs with one intercepti­on and three sacks. Chase had his first quiet game, other than the noticeable drops, as he finished with just three catches on nine targets for 32 yards and one touchdown. Tee Higgins had the best day of the receivers with four catches for 97 yards.

5. Trap game Cincinnati had all the momentum, coming off dominant wins at Baltimore and Detroit, but the Bengals haven’t won three road games in a row since 2015.

While the game was disappoint­ing, there’s no cause for concern. The loss falls between two big AFC North games, and the Bengals now refocus for Sunday’s home game against the Browns (4-4). Baltimore (5-2), which had a bye this week, now sits atop the division.

“You can learn a lot from every loss,” Burrow said after the game. “We will go back and watch the film and show where we weren’t good enough. You don’t play well enough in this league you are going to get beat by anyone.”

 ?? NOAH K. MURRAY / AP ?? New York Jets quarterbac­k Mike White completed 37 of 45 passes — most ever by an NFL quarterbac­k in his first start — for 405 yards and three touchdowns. The jets torched the Bengals for 511 total yards.
NOAH K. MURRAY / AP New York Jets quarterbac­k Mike White completed 37 of 45 passes — most ever by an NFL quarterbac­k in his first start — for 405 yards and three touchdowns. The jets torched the Bengals for 511 total yards.

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